Newsom’s “COVID cash” refunds designed to pacify frustrated voters?

Victoria Taft of PJ Media analyzes the state’s new $100 billion tax relief plan, which involves throwing hundreds to thousands of dollars to Californians as an odd—and depressingly ironic—apology for inflation. Fiscally unwise and inefficient, could Gov. Newsom’s payday plan be meant to “curry favor with angry voters”?

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Jax Oliver
Fighting homelessness requires acknowledging ties with addiction, mental illness, and crime

Politicians’ efforts to destigmatize the homeless community often suppress frank conversations about important correlating factors. In a Fox & Hounds Daily article, Christopher F. Rufo (of the Discovery Institute Center on Wealth, Poverty, and Morality) discusses research connecting homelessness with substance abuse/mental health disorders and criminal behavior. To address California’s homelessness epidemic, lawmakers must acknowledge the “perilous trifecta” of factors and implement relevant, holistic strategic initiatives.

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Jax Oliver
Houston Housing Dept: Key to success was discarding “burdensome” zoning laws

Exorbitant housing costs are the #1 reason ex-Californians cite for leaving; yet Houston, Texas continues steadily gaining residents and was ranked the #3 metropolitan area for population growth in 2020. Opp Now spoke with Ray Miller—Houston’s Assistant Director of Multifamily & Public Facilities in the Housing and Community Development Department—about Houston’s flourishing housing market and local takeaways for SJ.

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LAUSD analysis: Trivializing achievement standards won’t fix learning gaps

Former classroom teacher Larry Sand examines California’s academic achievement crisis and the Los Angeles Unified School District’s (LAUSD) laughable roadmap to correct it. Since 2021, the LAUSD doesn’t penalize absences, late work, inadequate engagement, or inappropriate behavior. Additionally, Sand critiques the California Department of Education’s highly deprecated “Mathematics Framework,” where getting the right answer isn’t as important as learning social justice dogma.

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Jax Oliver
Mahan on SJ's housing permitting fiasco: "a problem of accountability"

As reported exclusively on Opp Now, SJ City Staff's process for permitting new housing is a bottom feeder among major U.S. metros, exacerbating the city and region's housing woes. D10 CM and mayoral hopeful Matt Mahan says it's time for more proactive management techniques to break the permitting logjam at City Hall.

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Jax Oliver
Faith in trad. public schools sinking, charter schools’ popularity climbing

Larry Sand of the California Teachers Empowerment Network deconstructs the state’s illiteracy epidemic, which has observed decreased enrollment numbers for local public education (and resulting fallout of school closures and budgetary struggles). Charter school enrollment has boomed (15,000+ Californian students added in 2020–21 school yr.), as parents like its nonunionized, flexible, and high-achieving model. What if charter schools were championed and protected as much as public schools, especially considering their role in solving California’s educational and financial gaps?

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Jax Oliver
Excessive fees and policies throw a wrench into housing construction

California’s near-unaffordable housing market is no secret, but COVID isn’t all to blame. Housing consultant Timothy L. Coyle breaks down California’s high fees, mandated union-friendly project-labor agreements, and other requirements that exacerbate prices for residents. Why isn’t Gov. Newsom fighting against red tape costs to encourage housing construction?

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Jax Oliver
SF School Board reinstating grades-based admissions a win for ideological “normalcy”

In last week’s historic school board meeting, San Francisco voted 4-3 to discard their controversial, so-called equitable lottery admission process. Beginning in 2023, the district’s schools (including the prestigious Lowell High School) will resume admitting students based on grades. SFUSD’s decision—along with a green light to display a previously-condemned George Washington mural—shows that even ideologically extreme cities can voluntarily return to common sense, writes Evan Symon of the California Globe.

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Jax Oliver
“Ready, fire, aim”: CA’n HSR full steam ahead despite financial unviability

The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association (HJTA) has campaigned against California’s HSR fiasco since 2008, when their co-authored nonpartisan report found the project “highly risky for state taxpayers.” HJTA president Jon Coupal spoke with Opp Now to rebut pro-HSR’s elusive affordability arguments.

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Do PAGA and ADA empower serial suers to drain business revenue?

California’s “anti-employer agenda” threatened fiscal stability long before COVID-19 emerged, says entrepreneur–consultant Mike Vallante. Vallante avers that the laws Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) and Californian Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) employ nebulous language, which encourages costly, ridiculous-reasoned lawsuits against businesses. Since 75% of plaintiffs’ victory funds go straight to the state, PAGA and ADA lawsuits aren’t helping real victims and are crippling employers over trifles like “website accessibility.”

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Jax Oliver
Memo to CA legislators: Germany’s shift to green energy didn’t work either

Billions deep in renewable energy “solutions,” Germany has little to show besides increased carbon emissions, unimaginably costly electricity bills, and progressive environmental ruin. Public policy consultant Todd Royal warns that California must not continue to follow Germany’s lead—lest we engender further “energy poverty.”

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Jax Oliver
Calif. Assembly still blaming “price-gouging” profiteers for sky-high gas prices

Increased gas costs, more empty promises; suggestions from Republicans and Pres. Biden to take a gas tax holiday, radio silence. Journalist Katy Grimes examines how the California State Assembly refuses to confront the gas affordability issue. This week, they formed a price-gouging investigation committee but didn’t discuss actual, practical solutions such as tax relief could provide.

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Jax Oliver